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What is botany? Five Kingdoms 2 Kingdom System of Classification: Plants & Animals (Linnaeus, ~1750) 5 Kingdom System: Monera, Protista, Plantae, Fungi, Animalia (Robert Whittaker, 1969) 3 Domain System: Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya (our current best hypothesis) What does this timeline illustrate about the process of science? Three Domains The land plant Divisions Angiosperms 150 mya Gymnosperms 280 mya Ferns 400 mya Bryophytes 750 mya Red Green Brown Protists What is botany? Short answer: the study of plants (Kingdom Plantae, in Domain Eukarya) For Bio 1C: the study of Kingdoms Plantae, Fungi, “Protista,” and some photosynthetic members of Domain Bacteria What is Ecology? • The scientific study of the interactions between organisms and their environments is called ecology • provides a basic understanding of how natural processes and organisms interact, • gives us the tools we need to manage the planet’s limited resources over the long term 1 Major Components of the Environment • Abiotic components, which consist of nonliving chemical and physical factors, such as temperature, light, water, minerals, and air • Biotic components, which include the living factors—all the other organisms that are part of an individual’s environment. Hierarchy of Interactions • We can divide ecology into four increasingly comprehensive levels: organismal ecology, population ecology, community ecology, and ecosystem ecology The land plant Divisions Life on Earth - Timescale 3.4 BYA - heterotrophs 2.7-2.2 BYA O2 begins to Accumulate Gymnosperms 2.2 BYA first Eukaryotes 700 MYA sharp increase in Atmospheric O 2. Reached modern levels in Cambrian 570-510 MYA 450 MYA life on oceans surface and on to land The changing earth: The Origin of Life Angiosperms 150 mya 280 mya Ferns 400 mya Bryophytes 750 mya Red Green Brown Protists Fig. 14.2 • Early Earth was a very different place than it is now. – Chemically reactive atmosphere – Very little Oxygen – Very High UV and other energy sources (UV damages DNA/RNA) 2 Pasteur and biogenesis of microorganisms (Layer 3) Pasteur 1850s •Spontaneous Generation vs. Biogenesis So How did Life Originate? • Four Stage Hypothesis 1. Abiotic synthesis of Organic Monomers (the building blocks) 2. Abiotic Synthesis of Polymers, including amino acids and nucleic acids. 3. Formation of “Pre-cells” or protobionts: droplets with membranes that maintained an internal chemistry distinct from their surroundings. 4. Self replecating molecules arose, making inheritance possible Deep sea hydrothermal vents could also have played a role… The Miller-Urey experiment: 1953 •Origin of Life experiments •Miller-Urey Tested for Synthesis of Organic Monomers •Got all 20 amino acids, sugars, lipids, nucleotides, even ATP! Stage 4- Laboratory versions of “Protobionts” or Pre-cells •Producing organic polymers:dripping monomers onto hot sand, clay or rock. •Conditions existed near active volcanoes and…deep sea vents 3 Lynn Margulis: serial endosymbiosis Origin of Eukaryotic Cells Single Celled to Multicelled What is an “adaptation”? • From an evolutionary perspective: An adaptation is any trait or feature of an organism that increases its chances of reproducing. • From an interpretive perspective: An adaptation is any structure or mechanism exhibited by an individual species that allows it to meet its physiological requirements under the conditions posed by a particular habitat. Some adaptations… • Adaptations to live near shore (algae) to take advantage of nutrients • Transitioning to land means need water! Animals move, Fungi live underground (essentially) • Plants developed specialized tissue systems • The vascular system in plants • Protected gametophytes Linnaeus: 1750’s Binomial nomenclature 4 Taxonomy Three members of the violet genus Viola. They differ in features due to local adaptations, but there is an overall similarity. This genus has about 500 species Three Domains Five Kingdoms Cladistics: Cladograms and molecular data R.H Whittaker 1969 Evolutionary Trees What are the tools used by scientists to observe and understand evolutionary relationships? • • • • • • 1. Artificial selection 2. Fossil record 3. Comparative anatomy 4. Comparative embryology 5. Comparative biochemistry 6. Biogeography 5 Some major episodes in the history of life What about analogous structures? • Convergent evolution • Co-evolution Figure 25.8 Taxonomy starts with the latin binomial, and exhibits a hierarchical structure reflecting phylogenetic relationships among taxa or groups of organisms Systematics: connecting phylogeny and taxonomy Latin “binomial” or two-part name (genus and species) • Taxonomy = the science of classifying organisms • Phylogenetics = the study of phylogeny, or the history of evolutionary relationships among species Figure 25.9 The connection between classification and phylogeny: this phylogenetic tree organizes taxa into a hypothesized tree of evolutionary relatedness, with species at the tips of the branches. How are these phylogenetic trees constructed? Traditional Approach: Phenetics Classifications based on perceived overall similarity 6